Because of its two-stage process, the US constitution is difficult to amend. The Founding Fathers purposefully made amending the Constitution difficult.
Why is the US Constitution so rigid?
Because an amendment requires supermajorities at both the proposal and ratification stages, the United States Constitution is rigid (the most common method of amendment is proposal by a two-thirds vote in both houses of Congress followed by ratification by three-fourths of the states).
Flexible constitutions, on the other hand, allow the constitution and the government to act and react more easily as times change.
Therefore, they keep future generations from being bound by past commitments that no longer serve the common good.
Learn more about the U.S constitution from the given link.
brainly.com/question/14453917
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Answer:
A. He has to gather his courage before he is able to speak to the nose.
Explanation:
In the Nose, the strange and humorous story written by Gogol, the main character (Kovaloff) wakes up one day to find that he no longer is in possession of his own nose and, later, he finds out that the nose has been around in town and, socially, it seems to be more successful than Kovaloff himself. In the passage above, one can see that Kovaloff is intimidated by the nose since he ponders the social standing that the nose seems to have earned so quickly, and this makes him nervous and insecure, so much so that he has to gather his courage to barely mutter a few questions to it.
Answer:
A. haunted and wild
Explanation:
In "Kubla Khan", Coleridge starts with the description of Khan's pleasure dome, Xanadu, laying on the sacred river Alph.
Although we might expect a more detailed depiction of this palace and its purpose, the author quickly shifts to the stream of river which quickly becomes wild downstream of the palace.
This is because of the chasm in which the river flows, that is described as:
"A savage place! as holy and enchanted
As e'er beneath a waning moon was haunted
By woman wailing for her demon-lover!"
Such description of the nature (savage, wild and haunted) is in contrast with the descriptions of the romantics, to which Coleridge belonged, which opens many ways to interpret this poem.
I believe the answer is tone wordiness